
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has ordered a halt to the transit of natural gas through his country into Ukraine from July, according to a decree published overnight.
The decree follows Orbán's stated aim of pressuring the neighbouring country to restore the flow of oil through the Druzhba pipeline, which was damaged in a Russian strike.
"As long as Ukraine does not give us oil, it will not get gas from Hungary," Orbán said on Wednesday on his Facebook page.
According to experts, the blocking of gas transit into Ukraine raises serious legal questions.
The gas trade is in the hands of private companies, including firms that trade in the energy commodity and those that handle its transport through pipelines. In Hungary, this is pipeline operator FGSZ, a subsidiary of oil and gas group MOL.
Traders purchase transit capacities from pipeline operators, which are allocated at auction.
Orbán's decree prohibits Hungarian operator FGSZ from offering capacities for transit to the entry points into Ukraine from July onwards.
The company has already sold capacities for the second quarter, until June. Any interference with those contracts would have exposed the government to enormous compensation claims.
Ukraine received around 44% of its gas imports via Hungary last year, according to the state gas grid operator. Poland and Slovakia are also important transit countries for Ukrainian gas imports.
The Hungarian prime minister, seen as Russia's most important ally in Europe, faces a parliamentary election on April 12 and is accused of using its leverage over Ukraine to win votes.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Vote in favor of Your Fantasy Vehicle: Which Notable Model Catches Your Heart? - 2
Vote In favor of Your Favored Kind Of Organic product - 3
The Red Sea strategy: What does Israel stand to gain from recognizing Somaliland? - 4
ACA subsidies latest: Making sense of what's happening with health care after Republicans revolt, forcing a vote on funding extension - 5
Over 60 local leaders push Netanyahu to halt haredi draft bill, warn of social rift
Seoul says sorry after unapproved drone flights into North Korea
Record-breaking 'space laser' erupts from merging galaxies 8 billion light-years away
They died 'doing what they loved': The stories of workers in their 80s who died on the job
Extraordinary Snowboarding Objections All over the Planet
Amplifying Cash The executives: The Upsides and downsides of Various Ledgers
Famous Rough terrain Vehicles for 2024
Ukraine to get up to 100 French-made Rafale fighter jets
ABC News' Sam Champion opens up about recent health scare
Parents who delay baby's first vaccines also likely to skip measles shots













